Apple to lower battery replacement costs for select iPhones to $29

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The past few weeks have been tumultuous for Apple ever since the company confirmed it slows down iPhones as their batteries age. In a message posted to Apple’s website today, the company formally apologized to customers while explaining how iPhone batteries age, what Apple has already done to prevent unexpected device shutdowns, and what the company will do to address customer concerns.

“We know that some of you feel Apple has let you down. We apologize,” the letter reads. “There’s been a lot of misunderstanding about this issue, so we would like to clarify and let you know about some changes we’re making. First and foremost, we have never—and would never—do anything to intentionally shorten the life of any Apple product, or degrade the user experience to drive customer upgrades.”

The final part of the message is the most important for customers, as it lays out Apple’s plans to help them replace old iPhone batteries and better understand their device’s battery performance. The biggest change is that Apple will lower the cost of out-of-warranty battery replacements for iPhone 6 models and later from $79 to $29—a discount of over 60  percent. The program will start in late January and will be available worldwide by the end of 2018.

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Source: Ars Technica – Apple to lower battery replacement costs for select iPhones to

2.5 Geeks 12/28/17: iPhone Throttling, Area-51 Threadripper, AI Spies, LG V30 Oreo, Lenovo GIVEAWAY!

2.5 Geeks 12/28/17: iPhone Throttling, Area-51 Threadripper, AI Spies, LG V30 Oreo, Lenovo GIVEAWAY!
In this latest episode of HotHardware’s Two And A Half Geeks webcast. Today we’ll be chatting about Apple’s iPhone throttling controversy, the beastly Alienware Area-51 Threadripper Edition gaming PC, AI Voice Assistant devices like Amazon Echo and Google Home potenitally being used as corporate spy machines, the LG V30 gets Android Oreo,

Source: Hot Hardware – 2.5 Geeks 12/28/17: iPhone Throttling, Area-51 Threadripper, AI Spies, LG V30 Oreo, Lenovo GIVEAWAY!

Scientists Observe Strange Double Whirlpool Effect in Ocean for First Time

Slow waves meander westward out in the deep ocean south of Australia. Sometimes they carry with them carry large eddies, whirlpools over 100 miles across. But every so often, these whirlpools combine into double whirlpools and travel across the ocean 10 times faster than the rest of the whirlpools, moving in sync for…

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Source: Gizmodo – Scientists Observe Strange Double Whirlpool Effect in Ocean for First Time

Google Stops Selling the Pixel C Android Tablet

Google is no longer selling the Pixel C, its flagship Android tablet released about two years ago. “Google’s commitment to Android on tablets wasn’t strong even then, and now the Pixel C is gone from the Google Store — the listing page redirects you to the Pixelbook,” reports Android Police. From the report: The Pixel C was an odd device. By all accounts, the hardware was originally intended to run Chrome OS, but Google couldn’t get the platform ready for an all-touch device in time. So, the Pixel C became an Android slate. Google has been selling the device continuously since late 2015. It even offered some discounts on the tablet via the Google Store, which it almost never does for other devices. The 32GB Pixel C was pulled a while back, but Google kept the 64GB variant around. At a whopping $599, I doubt many people were buying it. Now, the Pixel C is completely gone from the Google Store, and there’s no new tablet to replace it.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Google Stops Selling the Pixel C Android Tablet

Apple Gives in to Furious Customers, Slashes Price on iPhone Slowdown Fix

Apple has finally recognized that it will have to do more to calm customers’ ire after admitting to, and then apologizing for slowing down their old iPhones. In a letter my mother would have said was “passive aggressive” and “not really apologetic at all” had I written it, Apple wrote: “We know that some of you feel…

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Source: Gizmodo – Apple Gives in to Furious Customers, Slashes Price on iPhone Slowdown Fix

LastPass fixes fingerprint security flaw in its Authenticator app

Password manager LastPass has an extra layer of protection for its Authenticator app, in the form of a fingerprint and/or PIN that ostensibly keeps people out of your passwords if they find your phone unlocked. Last week, a developer posted that he’d…

Source: Engadget – LastPass fixes fingerprint security flaw in its Authenticator app

Deadspin We’ve Forgotten How To Fear | Jezebel Maybe People Should Refresh Themselves On What ‘Movie

Deadspin We’ve Forgotten How To Fear | Jezebel Maybe People Should Refresh Themselves On What ‘Movies’ Are Before Seeing The Last Jedi  | Splinter ‘There was NO blood, NO semen and there was NO Satanism’: Read The Scathing Editor’s Notes on Milo’s Killed Book | Earther Why the Eastern US Will Be Bone Chillingly Cold…

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Source: LifeHacker – Deadspin We’ve Forgotten How To Fear | Jezebel Maybe People Should Refresh Themselves On What ‘Movie

The Best, Worst, and Most Unforgettable Movie Moments of 2017

It doesn’t matter if a movie’s good, bad, or just mediocre—any film can have a moment that makes your jaw drop in awe or tears come to your eyes, or makes you shudder in irritation and disgust. Here are all the greatest and worst individual moments from the cinematic releases of 2017.

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Source: Gizmodo – The Best, Worst, and Most Unforgettable Movie Moments of 2017

The Beauty of Freezing Bubbles Is the Only Good Thing About These Nightmarish Temperatures

Did you for some reason think the grueling endurance march that was 2017 would end without one final ordeal? You fool. Right now the eastern and midwestern parts of the country are enduring record-breaking sub-zero temperatures, with the only silver lining being that it’s cold enough to instantly freeze soap bubbles,…

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Source: Gizmodo – The Beauty of Freezing Bubbles Is the Only Good Thing About These Nightmarish Temperatures

How Pirates Of The Caribbean Hijacked America's Metric System

If the United States were more like the rest of the world, a McDonald’s Quarter Pounder might be known as the McDonald’s 113-Grammer, John Henry’s 9-pound hammer would be 4.08 kilograms, and any 800-pound gorillas in the room would likely weigh 362 kilos. NPR explores: One reason this country never adopted the metric system might be pirates. Here’s what happened: In 1793, the brand new United States of America needed a standard measuring system because the states were using a hodgepodge of systems. “For example, in New York, they were using Dutch systems, and in New England, they were using English systems,” says Keith Martin, of the research library at the National Institute of Standards and Technology. This made interstate commerce difficult. The secretary of state at the time was Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson knew about a new French system and thought it was just what America needed. He wrote to his pals in France, and the French sent a scientist named Joseph Dombey off to Jefferson carrying a small copper cylinder with a little handle on top. It was about 3 inches tall and about the same wide. This object was intended to be a standard for weighing things, part of a weights and measure system being developed in France, now known as the metric system. The object’s weight was 1 kilogram. Crossing the Atlantic, Dombey ran into a giant storm. “It blew his ship quite far south into the Caribbean Sea,” says Martin. And you know who was lurking in Caribbean waters in the late 1700s? Pirates.

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Source: Slashdot – How Pirates Of The Caribbean Hijacked America’s Metric System

Netflix's 'Bright' nabs 11 million viewers in its first three days

It turns out betting on Will Smith paid off for Netflix. The company’s first blockbuster film, Bright, garnered 11 million streaming viewers in the U.S. over its first three days, according to Nielsen figures reported by Variety. To put that in persp…

Source: Engadget – Netflix’s ‘Bright’ nabs 11 million viewers in its first three days

Ultimate Theory of Particle Physics Holds Where Physicists Hoped It Wouldn't

The smallest pieces of the universe are governed by a beautiful and mind-blowing set of rules: the “Standard Model.” The Standard Model explains the behavior of all 17 discovered particles, and it continues to make predictions that have been proven accurate by the largest physics experiments in the world, including…

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Source: Gizmodo – Ultimate Theory of Particle Physics Holds Where Physicists Hoped It Wouldn’t

How to Use Firefox’s Killer New Screenshot Tool

If you’re not taking screenshots of your computer screen much, remembering which key combos to hit might be more confusing than convenient. If you hate keyboard shortcuts, Mozilla’s new Firefox Quantum browser makes it incredibly easy to capture what’s on your screen thanks to its built in Firefox Screenshots service.…

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Source: LifeHacker – How to Use Firefox’s Killer New Screenshot Tool

Apple apologizes for confusion over slowdowns with older iPhones

Apple has been in hot water for the last few weeks after the company admitted that it sometimes reduced processor speeds on iPhones with aging batteries as a way to balance performance and battery life. Today, the company is apologizing for not being…

Source: Engadget – Apple apologizes for confusion over slowdowns with older iPhones

HTC, Motorola Say They Don't Slow Old Phones Like Apple Does

After Apple confirmed last week that it reduces the performance of older iPhones to improve battery life, it has left many wondering whether or not other smartphone manufacturers do the same. HTC and Motorola are the two most recent OEMs to say they don’t throttle their phones’ processor speeds as their batteries age. The Verge reports: In emails to The Verge, both companies said they do not employ similar practices with their smartphones. An HTC spokesperson said that designing phones to slow down their processor as their battery ages “is not something we do.” A Motorola spokesperson said, “We do not throttle CPU performance based on older batteries.” The Verge also reached out to Google, Samsung, LG, and Sony for comment on whether their phone processors are throttled in response to aging batteries. A Sony spokesperson said a response would be delayed by the holidays, and a Samsung spokesperson said the company was looking into it. The responses begin to clarify whether or not throttling processor speeds is typical behavior in smartphones — as of last week, we knew that Apple was doing it, but not whether it was common practice among competitors. HTC and Motorola’s responses start to suggest that it’s not.

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Source: Slashdot – HTC, Motorola Say They Don’t Slow Old Phones Like Apple Does

Guy Creates iPhone X 'Invisible Face' Hack

iphone-x-invisible-face.jpg

This is a short video demonstration of the iPhone X invisible face hack created by Japanese app developer Kazuya Noshiro using the phone’s facial recognition and tracking capabilities. How does it work? Simple!:

According to Noshiro’s tweets, the app was made on game development platform Unity, and uses a fixed camera position to shoot a background in order to create the illusion.

So it just uses a picture of the fixed background and replaces your recognized face (sans hair, eyes and lips) with that background. I told you it was simple. “You still don’t understand it, do you?” Of course not, do I look like some sort of egghead? “Well your head is kind of–” You wouldn’t!

Hit the jump for the video.

Source: Geekologie – Guy Creates iPhone X ‘Invisible Face’ Hack

SoftBank Acquires Big Stake In Uber In a Major Victory For Both Companies

According to Recode, “Softbank and its co-investors have successfully acquired at least 13 percent of Uber, a major victory for Uber’s new CEO and one that will give billions of dollars in cash to some of the company’s earliest investors and employees.” Recode highlights the far-reaching consequences:
Uber’s board of directors, which had devolved into a power struggle between Uber’s former CEO, Travis Kalanick, and its largest investor, Benchmark, will now likely be calmer. Benchmark is expected to drop its lawsuit against him. And Uber will enact governance reforms that disempower the two warring factions and increase the size of the board to a massive 17 people.
A lot of people are now very rich. While we have yet to learn which investors have cashed out for the price of about $33 a share, Thursday’s result is the reward for years of drama at a company that nevertheless saw astronomical growth since its founding in 2009. Uber’s earliest employees who sold are now millionaires, and venture firms could see billions of dollars flow into their bank accounts.
Uber now has a powerful strategic partner in SoftBank, the Japanese telecom giant that is investing hundreds of billions of dollars in technology. SoftBank, which is heavily invested in other ride-hailing companies around the globe, could help Uber strike more partnership deals, especially in Asia. SoftBank will occupy two seats on the company’s board and will now be an extremely influential player in decisions at Uber.
The deal nevertheless sharply discounts Uber’s value, which last year was estimated at almost $70 billion. SoftBank and its co-investors are acquiring some of the company at a valuation of $48 billion. While a 30 percent discount is not unusual in a transaction like this, it does reflect some concerns about how the company can move forward after a year of upheavel that has not totally abated.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – SoftBank Acquires Big Stake In Uber In a Major Victory For Both Companies